Skip to content
stoplemons
Kent County

Warwick Lemon Law

Drivers in Warwick are covered by the Rhode Island Lemon Law (New Vehicles) and Used Motor Vehicle Warranties Act (R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 31-5.2-1 to 31-5.2-14 (new); R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 31-5.4-1 to 31-5.4-7 (used)). If your new or used vehicle has a substantial defect the dealer can't fix, you may be entitled to a refund, replacement, or cash settlement. The manufacturer pays the legal fees — you pay nothing out of pocket.

Where Warwick cases are filed

Motor Vehicle Arbitration Board, Rhode Island Office of the Attorney General (or Kent County Superior Court)

150 South Main St, Providence, RI 02903

https://riag.ri.gov/what-we-do/civil-division/public-protection/consumer-protection/lemon-law →

Why local conditions matter

How Warwick's driving environment affects vehicle reliability

Warwick has humid summers, cold snowy winters with RIDOT salt-brine treatment, and significant coastal exposure on Greenwich Bay and Narragansett Bay shorelines. Salt corrosion (road and sea), freeze-thaw potholes, and heavy I-95 commuter and TF Green airport traffic stress brakes, electronics, and underbody components on passenger vehicles.

Major routes:  I-95 · I-295 · RI-37 · RI-2 (Bald Hill Road) · US-1 (Post Road)

Coastal and road-salt corrosion of underbody and connectors

Warwick combines heavy RIDOT winter road-salt brine on I-95, I-295, and RI-37 with year-round salt-air exposure from Greenwich Bay and Narragansett Bay, accelerating corrosion of brake lines, fuel lines, subframes, and electrical connectors well within warranty, producing failures manufacturers sometimes try to dismiss as environmental but which remain warranty defects when premature.

Suspension and wheel/tire damage from pavement defects

Warwick's mix of older surface streets along Post Road and Warwick Avenue plus heavy freeze-thaw pothole cycles surfaces recurring strut, control-arm, and wheel-bearing complaints; when failures recur within warranty after pothole inspections show no impact damage, the pattern often reflects a manufacturing nonconformity.

Transmission and start-stop drivability in stop-and-go traffic

Constant stop-and-go congestion on I-95 around the TF Green Airport interchange and the Bald Hill Road retail corridor forces transmissions, torque converters, and start-stop systems to cycle thousands of times per week, surfacing harsh shifts, shudder, and start-stop disable faults well within warranty mileage.

Dealership clusters

Warwick is home to Rhode Island's largest concentration of franchise dealerships, clustered along the Bald Hill Road (RI-2) and Quaker Lane corridor near the I-95 interchange, with additional dealers along Post Road (US-1) and West Shore Road. The Bald Hill Road auto row draws buyers and warranty work from across Rhode Island, southeastern Massachusetts, and eastern Connecticut, so many Warwick filings involve repairs performed at these same dealerships.

Brands we see most

Warwick's brand mix reflects suburban commuter and family-vehicle demand with strong Toyota, Honda, Subaru, Hyundai, and Ford share, plus meaningful European-import volume (BMW, Audi, Volkswagen) given the concentration of Bald Hill Road luxury dealers. Pickup-truck share is moderate, reflecting suburban contractor and homeowner demand more than rural use.

Areas served around Warwick

  • Apponaug
  • Pawtuxet Village
  • Conimicut
  • Hoxsie
  • Cowesett
  • Greenwood
  • Buttonwoods

Your rights under Rhode Island law

Rhode Island Lemon Law (New Vehicles) and Used Motor Vehicle Warranties Act

Rhode Island Lemon Law (New Vehicles) and Used Motor Vehicle Warranties Act (R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 31-5.2-1 to 31-5.2-14 (new); R.I. Gen. Laws §§ 31-5.4-1 to 31-5.4-7 (used)) gives Rhode Island drivers the right to a refund, replacement, or cash settlement when the manufacturer can't fix a substantial defect. The threshold is 4 repair attempts or 30 cumulative days out of service, within 12 months of delivery.

Full Rhode Island lemon law guide →

Common questions

Lemon law in Warwick, RI

Where do I file a lemon law claim if I live in Warwick?

Rhode Island consumers have two paths. Most new-vehicle claimants file with the state's Motor Vehicle Arbitration Board within the Office of the Attorney General Consumer Protection Unit, headquartered at 150 South Main Street in Providence; the Board must issue a decision within 90 days, and its decision binds the manufacturer (but you may reject and appeal). The alternative path is civil action in Kent County Superior Court for Warwick residents. Used-vehicle claims under R.I. Gen. Laws § 31-5.4 are filed in court, not the Board. The manufacturer's qualifying informal dispute settlement program may need to be used first if properly disclosed.

How many repair attempts does Rhode Island require?

For new vehicles, R.I. Gen. Laws § 31-5.2 presumes a reasonable number of repair attempts after the same defect has been subject to repair four or more times within one year or 15,000 miles (whichever ends first), OR if the vehicle has been out of service for repair for a cumulative 30 or more days within that period. For used vehicles under § 31-5.4, the threshold is three repair attempts for the same defect by the selling dealer within the warranty period, or 15 cumulative days out of service. Warwick drivers should keep every repair order because attempts at any authorized Rhode Island dealer count toward the threshold.

Are used cars covered in Rhode Island?

Yes. Rhode Island is one of the few states with a robust used-car lemon law (R.I. Gen. Laws § 31-5.4). Dealers must provide written warranties on most used vehicles, with minimum durations based on the odometer at sale - lower-mileage vehicles get longer protection. If the same defect persists after three repair attempts, or the vehicle is out of service for repair for 15+ cumulative days during the warranty period, the dealer must refund the purchase price less a reasonable allowance for use. Private-party sales and certain very-high-mileage vehicles are excluded. Save every repair order and the original Buyers Guide.

How does Warwick's coastal climate affect lemon claims?

Warwick combines heavy RIDOT winter road-salt brine on I-95, I-295, and RI-37 with year-round salt-air exposure from Greenwich Bay and Narragansett Bay shorelines, which together accelerate corrosion of brake lines, fuel lines, subframes, and electrical connectors well before warranty mileage expires. Humid summers, freeze-thaw potholes, and TF Green Airport-driven congestion compound the duty cycle on transmissions, brakes, and HVAC. Manufacturers often invoke 'environmental wear' defenses, but Rhode Island law focuses on whether the defect substantially impairs use, value, or safety. Repair orders and in-warranty corrosion photos help defeat the climate excuse.

How long do I have to file a Rhode Island lemon claim?

Under R.I. Gen. Laws § 31-5.2, any new-vehicle action must be commenced within three years of the date of original delivery, OR within two years after the date the odometer reached 15,000 miles, whichever is earlier. Time spent in arbitration tolls these deadlines. Used-vehicle claims under § 31-5.4 generally follow the standard contract limitations period. Federal Magnuson-Moss claims typically borrow Rhode Island's four-year UCC period. Because the new-vehicle deadline is shorter than many states, Warwick drivers should file or initiate arbitration early - waiting until the warranty ends can extinguish your claim.

What can I recover if I win my Warwick lemon law case?

For new vehicles, you may receive a comparable replacement vehicle or a refund of the full purchase price plus collateral charges (sales tax, registration, finance charges), less a reasonable allowance for use as calculated by the Motor Vehicle Arbitration Board based on miles driven before the first repair. For used vehicles, the dealer must refund the purchase price less reasonable use. Both statutes shift reasonable attorney fees and costs to the prevailing consumer. Rhode Island also requires that any vehicle returned to the manufacturer cannot be resold or re-leased in-state without clear written disclosure of the lemon law buyback to the next buyer.

Stuck with a lemon in Warwick?

Free case review. No fees unless we win — and the manufacturer pays the legal fees, not you.